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Folklore Agadir Morocco | |
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Moroccan folklore expresses and enhances everyday life of which it is an
integral part. Although loyal to its forms of expression for generations, it is
being continually enriched by popular imagination, under the influence of new
events on the national, tribal or individual levels.
Moroccan folklore is extremely diverse. It varies not only from one area to
another but each tribe, nomadic or sedentary, has its own repertory, the extent
and wealth of which will surprise the layman. Besides the exotic, picturesque,
colorful or romantic aspects of the setting, folk dancers form an ensemble of
traditions, a world of symbols which are undecipherable today. THE AWASH
The dance comes from the High Atlas valleys in the Ouarzazate
area. A circle of women in multicolored robes stands motionless. In the center,
men sit around a fire, each of them with a "bendir" (a circular wooden frame
with a hide stretched over it). A piercing cry breaks the silence. It is a shout
more than a song. All the drums beat. The song of the men begins, mounting
skyward. The women reply. Shoulder to shoulder, they sway rhythmically and
slowly. The rhythm gets faster and faster until the finale.
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THE OUAIS
Set to very ancient music, in which is easy to perceive Middle
Eastern accents, this dance is like a ballet.
The orchestra comprises a one-stringed fiddle, or "rbab soussi", and a
certain number of "guembris" which are small mandolins with three strings
sometimes made with a turtle shell. The rhythm is provided by a beater who
strikes a piece of cast iron lying on the ground. The dancers add to the music
with small copper cymbals attached to their fingers. All the dancers wear city
dress: a colored "kaftan", a muslin "dfina", an embroidered silk belt, a cord
decorated with spangles woven around the head. The dance is graceful and
comprises several steps. Couplets alternate with the step to make an uncommonly
delicate spectacle.
THE TISSINT
South of Agadir, men and women, entirely garbed in
indigo-blue, perform a dance which resembles a religious rite.
Perhaps it is an ancient rite. The dagger dance is clearly symbolic. It is
part of marriage ceremonies. Men and women dance to a rhythm that becomes more
rapid. A young girl and boy leave the circle to do a duet. The boy holds a
dagger at arm's length at the end of a cord. He spins about, making circles
around the girl, withdraws and comes nearer, until they are face to face.
Advancing towards each other with short steps, the boy raises his arms to place
the dagger around the young girl's neck as she continues to dance. Slowly the
boy falls to his knees in front of her. The song continues.
THE TASKIOUINE
No doubt a warrior's dance, since women do not take part.
Wearing white tunics and turbans, with powder- horns on their shoulders, the
dancers keep time to the accompaniment of earthware tambourines covered with
skins. They dance shoulder to shoulder or in indian file. The body is shaken
rhythmically and stopped suddenly with perfectly- timed stamping of the feet. It
is a frank, powerful and virile dance without any mannerism or any equivocal
gestures. Although athletic, it is nevertheless aesthetic.
THE GNAOUAS
African in origin, the Gnaoua dance belongs to brotherhood
music-lore. The tumblers of the jemaa El Fna in Marrakech have transformed it
into an entertainment. The instruments are as primitive as ever: large drums and
wrought iron castanets form the orchestra. Cowrie shells and glass beads are
worn as ornaments that recall the dance's origin and its magical or religious
aspect. Some of the dancers perform leaps worthy of the best acrobats. They
manage to jump high in the air without missing a beat of the rhythm. It is a
show with great dramatic intensity. Free
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